Abstract

Escherichia coli 173-25, whose cell wall was labelled with14C-diaminopimelic acid, was found to lose about 15% radioactivity during growth in a fresh medium, two thirds or more being lost during the first two generations. Degradation products of the cell wall were mostly of low-molecular type. About 5% of the cells lyzed as a result of transfer associated with filtration, washing and resuspension of the bacterial population in a diaminopimelic acid (DAP) deficient medium. The degradation was very low during the first 20 min. The amount of wall material released from the cells increased between 20–30 min and a sudden decrease of viability of the population was observed. The degradation of murein triggered by starvation for DAP continued when supplementing the deficient medium with DAP and when growth was resumed. About one-half of the cell wall material released into the medium under these conditions was macromolecular. However, lysis of the cells and release of proteins into the medium were rapidly interrupted after DAP was added to the starving culture and the differential rate of synthesis of the cell wall increased. Turnover of murein was not associated with protein turnover.

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